Philadelphia Media Network Sold For $55 Million

The changing fortunes of the publisher of The Philadelphia Inquirer and Philadelphia Daily News encapsulate the
long-term decline in the newspaper industry.

Originally purchased by a group of private investors for $515 million in June 2006, Philadelphia Media Network’s buying price first tumbled
to $139 million in October 2010, when it was acquired in a bankruptcy auction by a group of investors led by Alden Global Capital and Angelo, Gordon & Co -- then plunged to just $55 million in the
latest transaction, when it was bought by another group of investors, led by Lewis Katz, a 70-year-old local businessman.

The deal, which was agreed to this week, also provides a capital
infusion of $10 million for continuing operations. Even so, the $65 million total represents an 87% decline in the value of the company since 2006.

Part of this shrinkage can be attributed to
the divestment of certain assets, including its office tower, sold last year for almost $23 million. But the main factor is the steep, continuing decline in the newspaper industry, due primarily to
the loss of print ad revenues.

While the company doesn’t report financial results publicly, a report in the Philadelphia Inquirer noted that a company spokesman recently
justified a new round of layoffs with the admission that the “kind of revenue we have been generating has not been enough to sustain the personnel we have.”

CEO Greg Osberg will be
staying with the company, but it’s not clear whether the new owners intend to carry on with some of Osberg’s innovative programs revealed last year. In June 2011, Osberg said that the
company would begin marketing a relatively cheap tablet-style reader using Google's Android operating system -- the Arnova 10 G2 tablet -- bundled with digital subscriptions to its newspapers.

Under one plan, consumers can pay $129 for the tablet plus a one-year subscription to three newspaper apps, which costs $12.99 every four weeks. Under another plan, consumers pay $99 and get a
two-year subscription to the apps for $9.99 every four weeks.

The internet did not kill this newspaper business; management did along with investment choices that a 6th grader could see through. What when on there would make your hair turn grey, white and gone in 60 seconds. They just rehired an ex marketing guy whose only contribution in 20+ years was not editing their wall calendar with the November 31st on it. (And another with two November 13ths.)